Moroi: Symphony No. 3, Op. 25 / Sinfonietta, Op. 24 / Two Symphonic Movements, Op. 22
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Saburo Moroi (1903-1977) Symphony No. 3 Two Symphonic Movements Sinfonietta A pioneer in Japan in the development of abstract music, Saburo Moroi was born...
Saburo Moroi (1903-1977)
Symphony No. 3 Two Symphonic Movements Sinfonietta
A pioneer in Japan in the development of abstract
music, Saburo Moroi was born in Tokyo on 7th August
1903. His family was from Honjo of Saitama
Prefecture, adjacent to the north of Tokyo. His father
Tsunehei Moroi (1862-1941) was a leading
industrialist. founder of the Chichibu Cement Company
Limited, an enterprise later taken over by Kan'ichi
Moroi (1896-1968), Saburo's older brother, a leading
economist and businessman. Saburo grew up,
influenced and stimulated by this seven-year-older,
scholarly brother, who had a good knowledge of arts in
general and was able to play the piano. Saburo was
given piano lessons by him in his early years and began
composing simple pieces as a child. It was in his third
year of Junior High School in Tokyo that he made up
his mind to become a composer. His brother took him to
a series of recitals by the pianist Sueko Ogura, who had
just returned to Japan after her studies in Berlin under
Heinrich Barth and her stay in the United States. The
programme was the Beethoven sonatas.
While studying at Urawa High School and later in
the Literature Department of Tokyo Imperial University
(his major was aesthetics and art history), Moroi took
piano lessons from Eiichi Hagiwara at first, and then
Willy Bardas (Schnabel's pupil, who had lived in Japan
since 1923) and Leonid Kochanski (Leonid Kreutzer's
pupil, who became professor of Tokyo Music School in
1925), as well as teaching himself composition and
theory. His father wanted him to enter the business
world, but gradually came to understand his son, finally
agreeing in 1930 to his becoming a musician.
It was during his third year at university, Moroi
formed a music group "surya" (the "sun god" in
Sanskrit) with his friends. It served as an organization
for performing his own works, and by 1931 seven
concerts had been given there. The first one was for
orchestral works and the series included Moroi's Piano
Concerto in F sharp minor, Symphonic Fragment,
Piano Quintet, String Quartet "Voice of Dream", two
violin sonatas, two cello sonatas and five piano sonatas.
His activities with "surya" brought wider recognition,
and it also became a society for young literary men and
artists, including Tetsutaro Kawakami, Hideo
Kobayashi, Chuya Nakahara, Tatsuji Miyoshi, Hidemi
Kon, Shohei O'oka and Kenzo Nakajima, many of
whom were later to become renowned literary critics,
poets and novelists.
Feeling that his compositional skills were not fully
developed, Moroi went to Germany in 1932 to study at
the Berlin Musikhochschule under Leo Schrattenholz
(who had been an assistant to Karl Leopold Wolf,
during the distinguished Japanese composer Kosçak
Yamada's period of study with him) and Walter
Gmeindl. Greatly stimulated by the music of Bruckner
and Hindemith, he returned to Japan in 1934, now a
mature composer, both technically and mentally, with
his Berlin days a great turning-point in his creative
career.
Moroi's creative life, in its true sense, started from
his Berlin days, as he himself claimed. Works from this
period include Piano Sonata No. 1, Op. 5, String
Quartet, Op. 6, Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 7, and
Symphony No. 1, Op. 8, all of which were composed
and first performed in Berlin. After returning to Japan,
he produced his Viola Sonata, Op. 11, Cello Concerto,
Op. 12, Bassoon Concerto, Op. 14, Flute Sonata, Op.
15, Symphony No. 2, Op. 16, String Sextet, Op. 17,
Violin Concerto, Op. 18, String Trio, Op. 19 and Piano
Sonata No. 2, Op. 20. They were written during the
fruitful period between 1933 and 1939. His reputation
was also enhanced during this period, especially by two
successful premières: the Japanese première of
Symphony No. 1 and the world première of Symphony
No. 2. In these works, Moroi assimilated the solid
framework of German music and tried, little by little,
various ways of reflecting a Japanese sense of beauty
within it, from the 1940s turning to a more acceptably
Japanese way of musical thinking, as can be heard in the
three orchestral works on this disc, which date from
1942-44.
Sinfonietta in B flat, Op. 24, was composed in a
short period between the 6th and 31st October 1943,
and was broadcast only five days after its completion
with the composer conducting the Tokyo Broadcast
Orchestra. The instrumentation consists of double
winds, brass, timpani and strings, and the work is
subtitled "For Children". The first movement, Allegro
grazioso, is in B flat, 3/4 time and sonata form. It is
followed by the ternary Andantino quasi Allegretto, a
minuet in G. The third movement, marked Lento
affabile, in 4/4 time, starts in B minor and shifts to B flat
major afterwards. It is in ternary form, with a coda. It
contains thematic elements clearly of Japanese
inspiration.
Two Symphonic Movements, Op. 22, was completed
on 9th May 1942, and was first given on 9th April of the
following year by Hisatada Odaka and the Japan
Symphony Orchestra (today's NHK Symphony
Orchestra). The first movement, Andante grandioso, in
sonata form, is opened by the first theme in
straightforward unison of horns and strings. This theme,
made up of seven notes (which can be regarded as the
constituents for C minor or E flat major), starts with G,
which is repeated three times with a half note and two
quavers. It is followed by a string of scale-like notes in
even rhythm of quavers. These three characteristic
elements of the theme (repetition of the same note, even
rhythm and scale-like notes) are omnipresent
throughout the two movements. A secondary theme is
based on the Miyako-bushi pentatonic scale often used
in Kabuki and Geisha music. The second movement,
Allegro con spirito, has a flashy introduction. Then the
viola, clarinet and flute play the main theme one after
another. It is formed by combining a scherzo-like motif
(consisting of two perfect fourths and a descending
minor scale) and a hectic one (made up of even rhythm
in semiquavers and the repetition of the same note). The
latter motif is a variant of the rhythmic motif which
drove the first movement. The two movements are
closely tied by this design. Moroi's intention in this
work was to fuse two themes into one, or to maintain
music with only one theme. Why he tried this might
have something to do with the traditional nature of the
Japanese, who do not like friction of different opinions,
and with the fact that Japan was going to build a
totalitarian, homogeneous, and friction-free society not
only in Japan but also throughout Asia. His attempt was
to be explored further in his next symphony.
Symphony No. 3 Op. 25 was written between 11th
April 1943 and 26th May 1944, which means that he set
about this symphony immediately after the première of
Two Symphonic Movements, producing Sinfonietta on
the way. The instrumentation is woodwinds (3-3-3-3),
brass (4-3-3-1), timpani, side drum, bass drum, strings
and organ. The first movement is made up of an
introduction subtitled "A Tranquil Overture" and
marked Andante molto tranquillo e grandioso, in 3/2
time. This is followed by an Allegro vivace in 6/4 time,
with the title "Birth of Spirit and its Growth". This is in
the quasi-sonata form devised by Moroi. The violin
suggests the first motif made up of three notes (E-F-G),
which is repeated in various positions. Then, as if to
interrupt it, the trombone plays the second motif, which
is strongly accented and moves up and down
awkwardly. The two motifs are developed for some
time, when the chromatic, chorale-like third motif is
added by the oboe and the trombone. At this point
something strange happens. The three motifs, which
appeared quite different from each other, are now
arranged and connected together into a long single
melody, amounting to the true theme of the main part.
This is an evolved form of the idea for the first
movement of Two Symphonic Movements, a device
better suited to the Japanese tradition of harmony rather
than conflict. The second movement. Allegretto
scherzando, with the title "About Humour and Wit", is
in 5/8 time (2/4 + 1/8). This strange rhythmic pattern
suggests Japanese folk-songs and festive music.
Towards the end the trumpet and percussion play the
theme violently, which obviously evokes military
music. This movement expresses violence and fever of
war. The third movement, with the title "Aspects of
Death", is a songful slow finale, where the composer
meditates on the souls of the war dead or of those who
are going to die. It is in a free form, evolved from the
idea for the third movement of the Sinfonietta, and
begins Adagio tranquillo. A hymn-like motif is heard,
developed solemnly and leading to a trumpet fanfare.
Then comes a chromatic double fugato, marked
Andante tranquillo, perhaps a depiction of wandering
souls in dim light, before their final illumination as they
appear now enveloped by light, attracted by a majestic
sunset, and depart peacefully for the land of the dead.
The symphony reflects the desperate state of mind
of Japanese intellectuals in the last stage of war. From
1943 to 1944, when this work was written, the situation
was turning for the worse and the whole nation was
conscious of death. Moroi was no exception. In this
sense, this symphony amounts to his swan song.
Immediately after completing this work, Moroi was
called up and served in the army till the end of war,
August 1945. The symphony, as if to commemorate the
end of the Japanese Empire, was never to be performed
in wartime. In those days works by Japanese composers
were frequently performed to boost national prestige,
but large-scale works requiring long rehearsals were no
longer taken up in the confusion of war. When the
symphony was eventually premiered on 26th May 1950
by Kazuo Yamada and the Japan Symphony Orchestra,
Japan had already started its new life full of hope as a
democracy-oriented nation, turning its back on the past.
The work, representing an earlier period of national
identity, was no longer welcomed, and was not
performed again until 1978.
Moroi survived the war, and in the following 32
years wrote only eight works, including two
symphonies, a piano concerto in the twelve-tone
technique and a horn sonata. He spent much more time
educating young people and writing books on music
theory. He was well known as an educator from the
1930s on, and his pupils included Minao Shibata,
Yoshiro Irino and Ikuma Dan. His second son Makoto
Moroi also became a composer. Saburo Moroi died on
24th March 1977.
Adapted from a note by Morihide Katayama
Translation: SOREL
Sinfonietta in B flat major, Op. 24, "For Children" (more info)
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I. Allegro grazioso - 5:25
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II. Andantino quasi Allegretto - 3:16
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III. Lento affabile - 7:05
2 Symphonic Movements (Kokyoteki nigakusho), Op. 22 (more info)
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I. Andante grandioso - 12:05
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II. Allegro con spirito - 7:04
Symphony No. 3, Op. 25 (more info)
-
I. A Tranquil Overture: Andante molto tranquillo e grandioso - Birth of Spirit and it's Growth: Allegro vivace - 15:09
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II. About Humour and Wit: Allegretto scherzando - 4:31
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III. Aspects of Death: Adagio tranquillo - 13:40